Ingapamba - Unroasted

from $10.60

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Why you’ll love this: Our most recent harvest has given us a clean and bright cup with quite the spectrum of qualities, from a tangy lemon-like acidity to a delightful raspberry and red-apple juiciness to a brown-sugar sweetness. The sweet and fruity notes harmonize beautifully with the coffee’s citrus zing, and its silky body and inviting aroma enhance its flavors, resulting in a tantalizing coffee that you won’t be able to resist!

Size:

Contact us for pricing of larger quantities &

international shipping options

Shipping Policy

Why you’ll love this: Our most recent harvest has given us a clean and bright cup with quite the spectrum of qualities, from a tangy lemon-like acidity to a delightful raspberry and red-apple juiciness to a brown-sugar sweetness. The sweet and fruity notes harmonize beautifully with the coffee’s citrus zing, and its silky body and inviting aroma enhance its flavors, resulting in a tantalizing coffee that you won’t be able to resist!

  • What’s in a name? “Ingapamba” is what we call the part of our farm where our coffee is grown, and it’s also where our farmhouse is. This is a word derived from the Quechua language, which the Incans brought to Ecuador during their invasion. To indigenous Ecuadorians, “Ingapamba” refers to Inca (“Inga”) and a specific area of land (“pamba”). To us, it is our favorite place on the farm—where home is.

    It’s where we have made so many memories. It’s where we have a view of the majestic green Andes towering over us as we step outside our door. It’s where the clouds cloak the mountaintops and the emerald hummingbirds seem to teleport from one brightly colored flower to another. It’s where rain and frogs sing us to sleep and the golden equatorial sun wakes us. It’s where countless crimson cherries ripen amidst citrus neighbors and delicate butterflies passing by. It’s where we work hard but also where we rest, recharge, dream, and plan for the future.

    What does “Ingapamba” mean to us today? It means family, legacy, and love.

    And for you—we hope it means great coffee!

How we got here: This coffee started with our traditional hand-picking and hand-sorting approach to harvesting. Next, we initiate a thorough washing process of the cherries that removes impurities and floaters (lower-quality beans). Afterward, the cherries are spread out on drying beds where we continue to remove defects by hand before we begin the first stage of our fermentation process.

During this phase, the coffee cherries are placed in our fermentation tanks with our natural mountain water until they arrive to the optimal pH level (this takes approximately forty-eight hours). After the cherry skins have been removed (depulped), the cherries are placed back into the fermentation tanks with the “mosto” (the juice-like liquid that is the byproduct of the initial fermentation process), and we start the second stage.

Once the coffee beans have arrived to the desired pH level, they are removed from the fermentation tanks and undergo the final washing step, where the mucilage is removed from the beans. Finally, the washed coffee beans are once again spread out on drying beds to finish the drying process. This can take anywhere from fifteen to twenty-one days (depending on environmental conditions).


Species: Arabica

Varietals: Typica Mejorado & Red Caturra

Process: Washed

Fermentation: Anaerobic

Harvest: 2025

Altitude: 1,500m. / 4,900ft.

Crop area: 2ha. / 5ac.

Moisture: 11.2% (last read January 2026)